Kinglake, Victoria

Two weeks after the February 7 2009 Black Saturday bush fires in Victoria, which killed 174 people, the Kinglake Football and Netball Club decided to soldier on. This was despite the township, but not the footy ground, being almost destroyed.

The Mighty Lakers not only found the will to play on but reached the 2009 grand final of the Yarra Valley Mountain District League, losing in the last 90 seconds to Olinda-Ferny Creek.

The clubs played a practice match on Sunday 21 March 2010 in Marysville, a town also virtually wiped off the map on Black Saturday. Marysville hasn’t had a football team since 1983 but the Kinglake players were happy to wear Marysville jumpers for the practice game. (The clubs share the same colours of green and gold, but different strips.)

A thousand local footy fans enjoyed the match, which also marked the 12-month anniversary of the re-opening of Marysville after initial bushfire clean-up and forensic investigation.

The Kinglake Football Club was formed in 1925 and folded in 1980. Ten years later the club was up and running again, only to go into recess in the 2001 season. It resumed in 2002 but was once again facing demise in 2007. The club gave it one last shot, not knowing of course, that its mettle would be supremely tested in the aftermath of Black Saturday.

The club has won three premierships, in 1939, 1940 and 1994. Its life members include Leo Lawrey, Mabel McMinn, Ray Bartram, Benjamin Collins and Cameron Caine.

The Kinglake scoreboard is a solid brick two-storey structure with ‘rubber-digital’ numbers held together by strong elastic. In a corner on the top level of the scoreboard are the old black and yellow tin numbers, now obsolete. (The scores in the photo are not from a game but from when I was passing by and exploring.)

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Sundries

"People can say what they like. There is only one thing that matters in AFL football and that's the scoreboard and it determines so many things. It determines coaches' destinies, club futures and where you are on the ladder." Denis Pagan, North Melbourne premiership coach, The Age, 5 May, 2016

Call us old-fashioned, but banners, club songs and plenty of goals - with or without giant birds flying out of multiple scoreboards - create the basic ingredients for a perfect day or night oout. - Caroline Wilson, The Age, 9 August 2014

"I didn't like the idea of them pulling down the scoreboard because I thought that should have been heritage listed." Bob Hill, Collingwood scoreboard attendant at Victoria Park from the late 1960s to 1999. The Age 24 May, 2014.

Scoreboards are stubborn things but they've been around a long time. Stats are always playing catch up.